Nokia Tumbles in Smartphone Ranking

We know it's been coming for some time, but there is always something sad about seeing once-mighty companies slip down the popularity list.

That happened recently with Nokia Corp. (NYSE: NOK). Gartner Inc. reported this month that Nokia slipped from No. 3 in smartphone sales in the second quarter to No. 7 in the third.

Interestingly, BlackBerry (Nasdaq: RIMM; Toronto: RIM) -- another phone maker that has had its share of troubles in the last several quarters -- replaced Nokia at No. 3, with HTC not far behind. But these rankings may be short lived. "Both HTC and RIM have seen their sales declining in past few quarters, and the challenges might prevent them from holding on to their current rankings in coming quarters," Anshul Gupta, a principal research analyst at Gartner, said in a press release.

Worldwide sales of mobile phones to end users dropped 3.1 percent from a year earlier, to nearly 428 million units in the third quarter, according to Gartner. Smartphone sales rose 46.9 percent and accounted for 39.6 percent of total mobile phone sales.

Obviously, the fight for first and second place is clearly delineated by Apple Inc. (Nasdaq: AAPL) and Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. (Korea: SEC). "Both vendors together controlled 46.5 percent of [the] smartphone market leaving a handful of vendors fighting over a distant third spot," Gupta said.

According to Gartner, Samsung's mobile phones sales climbed 18.6 percent from a year earlir to almost 98 million units, with its Galaxy phones winning the global battle for marketshare. Apple sold 55 million smartphones in the third quarter, taking a 32.5 percent global share.

Nokia's mobile phone sales fell 21.9 percent from the second quarter, but overall sales of 82.3 million were better than Gartner's early estimate and were driven largely by increased sales of the Asha full-touch line, Gartner said.

As we all know, these rankings are a bit of a juggling game from quarter to quarter. The most innovative company will dominate the market, at least until another cool thing comes out.

Along those lines, Samsung is hoping to keep its competitive edge by looking at different form factors. Its latest concept appears to be the mass production of flexible mobile-device screens, according to a recent Wall Street Journal story (subscription required). The company's Samsung Display Co. is "in the last phase of development of so-called flexible displays for mobile devices, which are expected to be released in the first half of next year," according to the WSJ, which cited an unnamed source. The idea is that these plastic displays will help make mobile devices unbreakable, lighter, and bendable.

It's not clear when the displays will be available for commercial use, the WSJ said, and it's not clear to me if that will be enough of an innovation for Samsung to hold its lead. If nothing else, it will be fun to watch what other ideas come out as the smartphone market evolves and players rise and fall on the popularity scales.

My own personal experiences. I guess having dealt with my parents and parent's friends who ALWAYS have questions about any new device (without even trying it out), I assumed he would be the same. Until we started getting voice texts (new feature of WP8).

Lemmings march toward the sea at certain time of the year despite the fact that they can't swim. :( No one knows exactly why. However, some thories have been published about the lemming behaviour. This behaviour is not understood by humans, but in the lemming cyrcle of life there is a point to it.

Now, the parrot behaviour. Parrots repeat whatever they happen to hear, without any reason, or understanding of what they are saying. This behaviour is compared to the one I attribute to those humans who don't seem to give a second of their time to thinking, analyzing, and coming up with their own conclusions about something --like the specific thing we are discussing--.

As for people always comparing and looking at what others do, well, you don't want to hear what I think of that. :D But if you know me a little by now, you can imagine.

Biometrics applications are moving beyond fingerprint collection and face recognition. Innovative new uses pave the way for revenue growth, and the electronics industry could benefit from the windfall.

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